CAIRO -- A top U.S. diplomat Monday pressed Egypt’s interim leaders for a halt to violence and an inclusive transition to a new democratic government after the nation's Islamist president was ousted in a military coup.

The visit by Deputy Secretary of State William J. Burns came amid widespread anger at U.S. policy toward Egypt and continuing protests demanding the former leader’s reinstatement.

In remarks to Egyptian reporters, Burns repeated U.S. calls on the military to end “politically motivated arrests,” a reference to the warrants issued for hundreds of Muslim Brotherhood members, including ex-President Mohamed Morsi.

“If representatives of some of the largest parties in Egypt are detained or excluded, how are dialogue and participation possible?” Burns said.

U.S. officials said Burns met with Egypt’s interim president, Judge Adly Mahmoud Mansour, Vice President Mohamed ElBaradei and Defense Minister Abdel Fattah Sisi, as well as human rights activists, business leaders and bishops from the Coptic Christian Church, which has been the target of deadly sectarian attacks by suspected Morsi supporters since the July 3 coup.

“Egyptians understand that the first priority must be to end violence and incitement, prevent retribution and begin a serious and substantive dialogue among all sides and all political parties,” Burns said.

Egypt is sharply divided between Morsi’s supporters and opponents, and the Obama administration has managed to alienate people on both sides.

Leaders of an ultraconservative Islamist party as well as the organizers of the protests that helped bring down Morsi declined to meet the U.S. envoy. In separate statements, both groups criticized Washington’s interference in Egyptian affairs.

U.S. officials spoke by phone to members of the Brotherhood, but efforts to arrange a face-to-face meeting Monday fell apart over logistical arrangements, a Brotherhood spokesman said. State Department officials left open the possibility that Burns would meet with Brotherhood representatives before he left Egypt.

Backers of Morsi, who last year won a narrow majority in Egypt’s first free presidential election, say the Obama administration has abandoned democratic principles by recognizing the interim government and refusing to label Morsi’s ouster a coup. Doing so would require the administration to halt the annual $1.3-billion aid package to the Egyptian military that U.S. officials view as crucial to maintaining strategic influence in the country.

Morsi’s opponents, who accused him of running an Islamist dictatorship, have vilified the U.S. ambassador to Cairo, Anne Patterson, for comments before the coup that discouraged mass protests and appeared to play down Morsi’s authoritarian tendencies.

The U.S. Embassy in Cairo, which was closed to the public for two weeks because of the unrest, reopened Monday but with a warning that the possibility of protests in the area remained.

CAIRO -- Egyptians turned out Saturday to mark the third anniversary of the start of their dramatic Arab Spring uprising against Hosni Mubarak -- with pro-government gatherings going undisturbed by police and anti-government marches broken up by police with tear gas and birdshot. Clashes left at...

Egyptians are marking the third anniversary of the uprising that toppled longtime ruler Hosni Mubarak. Los Angeles Times photographers were in Cairo's Tahrir Square to document the momentous events that began Jan. 25, 2011.

CAIRO -- Before Jan. 25, 2011, I rarely spent time in Tahrir Square. For me, like millions of other Cairenes, it was no more than a busy downtown traffic hub you’d pass through on the way to somewhere else.

CAIRO -- As Egypt prepares to mark the third anniversary of the uprising that toppled longtime autocratic President Hosni Mubarak, planned remembrances of what seemed a euphoric moment of national unity are instead putting the country’s angry divisions on display.